The complexity and ambiguity in defining “old” facilitate the errors of denying aging or equating it with senility. This may impede diagnosis of manifestations of illness which vary with age, or lead to misunderstanding of the motives, values and adaptive tasks of the older patient or to setting of too ambitious or too limited therapeutic goals. (31 pp.)
Download Author: Kahana, Ralph J., M.D.
1 eBook available.
Free Book Categories
- All Books (1,920)
- Anxiety Disorders (41)
- Behavior Therapy (47)
- Borderline Syndromes (39)
- Brief Therapy (27)
- Chapter E-Books (1,705)
- Child Therapy (95)
- Coming Soon (0)
- Couple Therapy (39)
- Crisis (78)
- Depression (66)
- Eating Disorders (17)
- Family Therapy (70)
- Group Therapy (52)
- Mood Disorder (60)
- New Original Works (50)
- Object Relations (53)
- Psychiatry (73)
- Psychoanalysis (106)
- Psychosomatic (34)
- Psychotherapy (121)
- Psychotherapy and Fiction (63)
- Recently Added (18)
- Schizophrenia (33)
- Sex Therapy (41)
- Substance Abuse (39)
- Suicide (13)
- Supervision (35)
View By Author
Need to find a book by a specific author? Get the complete author list.
Comments
Click Testimonials to view all reader comments and reviews.
Recent Comments
- Robert Bastanfar, PHD on A Primer on Working with Resistance: “I enjoyed Dr. Stark’s insights.”
- Asigaci Chris on The Sexual Relationship: “Every week, I handle family disputes at least twice or sometimes more. But most peculiar is sexual-related offenses that are…”
- Minlun Kipgen on Living with Chronic Depression:A Rehabilitation Approach: “I am really thankful for providing so much valuable books on Depression..”
- Ted Cleave on Gestalt Therapy: “This site is one of my favourite sources of professional information for clients”
- Ted Cleave on Gestalt Therapy: “It’s a privaledge to be a client of an organisation devoted to developing the knowledge and positive thoughts of others.”